Nigeria’s communications regulator said MTN [JSE:MTN]
must stick to a December 31 deadline to pay a record $3.9bn (R60bn)
fine, even after Africa’s largest phone company prepares to try and
overturn the penalty in court.
“The deadline remains,” Tony Ojobo,
a spokesperson for the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), told
Bloomberg on Wednesday.
The NCC will consult with lawyers about
what to do if the Johannesburg-based company doesn’t pay the fine on
Thursday, he said, without providing detail on possible actions the
regulator may take.
MTN is challenging the penalty in the Federal
High Court in Lagos, the country’s commercial capital, after it said
earlier this month the NCC didn’t have the power to impose the fine.
The
regulator took action after MTN failed to meet a deadline to disconnect
5.1 million unregistered subscribers as security agencies seek to fight
crime and Islamist militants in a country with poor identity records.
The
regulator “will allow” the courts to do their work and the NCC is
planning to challenge the MTN dispute filed in Lagos, Ojobo said. MTN spokesperson Chris Maroleng declined to comment beyond a December 17 statement announcing the decision to go to court.
The company’s shares have declined 27% since the fine was made public on October 26, valuing the wireless operator at R256bn. While
MTN chairperson Phuthuma Nhleko has been leading negotiations with the
Nigerian authorities after CEO Sifiso Dabengwa resigned, Ojobo said he
wasn’t aware of any talks currently being held between MTN and the West
African nation’s regulator and government.
The question is whether the NCC will be overruled by the lenient telecommunications ministry in Nigeria.
On December 24, Fin24 published a Reuters story
that revealed that Nigerian authorities will wait for the outcome of
the court challenge before deciding on whether to the fine.
"The
federal government, NCC (regulator) or any government agent will not do
anything at the expiration of the December 31 deadline," said Victor
Oluwadamilare, the telecommunications ministry's media assistant.
"Now
that they (MTN) have gone to court we will await the outcome of the
case," he added. "This is a government that believes in the rule of
law."
The ministry appears to have taken a softer stance than the
regulator on the dispute. The minister Adebayo Shittu told Reuters last
month the West African nation did not want MTN to "to die" from the
fine.
The move against MTN came months after Muhammadu Buhari
became president of Africa's biggest economy, promising tougher
regulation and a fight against corruption. Other telecoms firms operating in Nigeria disconnected unregistered users within the deadlines set by the authorities.
- With additional reporting from Reuters.

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